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Landscape Ecology: Designing Sustainable Agricultural Landscapes
Journal of Sustainable Agriculture, 1992This chapter discusses landscape concepts including sustainability, hierarchy theory, and landscape diversity. It describes landscape approaches including problem-solving, net energy, and the use of geographic information systems. The chapter illustrates how the concept of net energy can be used as an integrative management approach.
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This article discusses landscape design and its types.
Allambergenova Arzayim Qudaybergenovna +1 more
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Allambergenova Arzayim Qudaybergenovna +1 more
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Design-code in landscape design
Декоративное искусство и предметно-пространственная среда. Вестник МГХПА, 2022N.I. Ibragimova, E.A. Kudryasheva
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1996
In the previous two chapters an orientation was provided about design as a human activity and about approaches to the design of social systems. Three questions were explored: What is design, how does design work, and why do we need it? In this chapter we build on the experience gained in the two previous chapters and develop a more advanced ...
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In the previous two chapters an orientation was provided about design as a human activity and about approaches to the design of social systems. Three questions were explored: What is design, how does design work, and why do we need it? In this chapter we build on the experience gained in the two previous chapters and develop a more advanced ...
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2011
Introduzione alla sezione dei progetti dello studio dell'architetto Odile ...
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Introduzione alla sezione dei progetti dello studio dell'architetto Odile ...
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Designing Living Landscapes: Cultural Landscapes as Landscape Architecture
Landscape Journal, 2016Cari Goetcheus, Robin Karson, Ethan Carr
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1999
Humans naturally tend to visualise physical landscapes in profile based on our grounded lives on the Earth’s surface, rather than as flat maps. For example, when thinking of a landscape like the Alps, an image of craggy peaks silhouetted against the sky invariably comes to mind instead of a 2D map, which is viewed from a theoretical vantage point above
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Humans naturally tend to visualise physical landscapes in profile based on our grounded lives on the Earth’s surface, rather than as flat maps. For example, when thinking of a landscape like the Alps, an image of craggy peaks silhouetted against the sky invariably comes to mind instead of a 2D map, which is viewed from a theoretical vantage point above
openaire +1 more source

